Philippa Gregory
AFTER a raft of thrilling novels exploring the kings,
queens, and politics of the medieval Wars of the Roses, Philippa Gregory turns
her historian’s keen eye and novelist’s vivid imagination to another turbulent period
of British history… the English Civil War.
Skipping forward two centuries, Gregory sweeps us away to
the remote coastal marshes of Sussex in 1648 and into the life of a young
midwife whose healing arts set her on a perilous path in a country increasingly
suspicious of priests, Popery and witchcraft.
Tidelands is the first book of Gregory’s new Fairmile series
and, in her trademark style, it’s a seething, smouldering, stunning story
steeped in the atmosphere, passion, and dark corners of women’s history that
have made her one of the world’s most popular novelists.
In a febrile England, held in the grip of a bitter civil war
and a naïve, renegade king fighting a losing battle against the power of a
rebellious, Puritan-led Parliament, Gregory sets her sights on the plight of an
ordinary woman caught up in a destructive political and social maelstrom.
Brimming with danger, dark secrets, forbidden love and set
in a haunting, moody, desolate landscape of stinking mud, sinking sand, hidden
ditches and grinding poverty, this gritty, coruscating portrait of 17th
century rural life is a far cry from the power play of the Plantagenet court.
STUNNING STORY: Philippa Gregory |
On Midsummer’s Eve in 1648, England is in the grip of civil
war and the struggle is reaching every corner of the kingdom, even to the
remote Tidelands, the marshy landscape of the south coast near the ancient city
of Chichester.
Alinor Reekie, the 27-year-old descendant of wise women,
crushed by poverty and superstition, waits in the graveyard under the full moon
for a ghost whose presence she believes will declare her free from her abusive fisherman
husband, Zachary, who has been missing for many months. Midwife and herbalist Alinor has been left to care for her
two teenage children, Alys and Rob, but a woman determined to succeed on her
own, and possessing skills that can so easily be interpreted as witchcraft, is
always under suspicion.
Instead of discovering Zachary’s ghost in the graveyard,
Alinor meets 22-year-old James Summer, a young Catholic priest on the run from
the Puritans and an integral player in an audacious Royalist plot to free King
Charles from imprisonment on the Isle of Wight.
Alinor, whose brother Ned is a fierce Parliamentarian, shows
James the secret ways across the treacherous marsh to the safe haven of the
local Catholic landowner Sir William Peachey’s home, not knowing that she is
leading disaster into the heart of her life.
Rewarded for her help, and increasingly involved with the
handsome priest whose interest in her has turned her from a woman of stone to
‘a woman of desire,’ Alinor is soon suspected by her neighbours of possessing
dark secrets.
Click here for Lancashire Post review
Click here for Lancashire Post review
A woman without a husband, skilled with herbs, ever eager to
make her own path in life, and now suddenly enriched, arouses envy in her
rivals and fear among the villagers… who are more than ready to take lethal
action into their own hands.
Gregory delivers her own special brand of history, mystery,
political turmoil and spine-tingling menace as Alinor – an outcast who is ‘not
a widow nor a wife’ – grows increasingly vulnerable in a land becoming more and
more obsessed with witch-mania.
The civil war has brought great social change and it’s a
dangerous time for a woman to be ‘different,’ particularly a wise woman like
Alinor… rumours of ‘magic’ cling to her ‘like the mist from the mire’ but she
has little choice but to continue with the only work she knows, even though it
leaves her prey to suspicion and fear.
Into this uncertain, alien landscape steps the young,
wealthy and hot-blooded priest James Summer, besotted and bewitched by a beautiful,
graceful and working-class woman he never expected to find ‘in a place like
this,’ and ready to take personal and political risks that could place them both
in peril.
The glaring divides between poverty and privilege, men and
women, Puritanism and Catholicism, power and powerlessness are relentlessly
exposed and explored in a scintillating, slow-burn story that twists, turns and
springs surprises at every juncture of Alinor’s gripping journey.
Rich in history and full of exquisitely observed characters
from all walks of life, Tidelands is sheer perfection in its sense of time and
place, and is a bewitching, superbly researched opener to what promises to be
one of Gregory’s best series yet.
(Simon & Schuster, hardback, £20)
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